
Eye Contact: Photographing Indigenous Australians
Jane Lydon
Lydon shows how the photographic portrayals of the Aboriginal residents of Coranderrk changed over time, reflecting various ideas of the colonial mission—from humanitarianism to control to assimilation. In the early twentieth century, the images were used on stereotypical postcards circulated among the white population, showing what appeared to be compliant, transformed Aboriginal subjects. The station closed in 1924 and disappeared from public view until it was rediscovered by scholars years later. Aboriginal Australians purchased the station in 1998, and, as Lydon describes, today they are using the Coranderrk photographic archive in new ways, to identify family members and tell stories of their own.
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About Jane Lydon
Reviews for Eye Contact: Photographing Indigenous Australians
Joanna Sassoon
History of Photography
“Eye Contact is a fine contribution to visual history, colonial studies, and comparative work on visual culture and photography more broadly.”
Corinne A. Kratz
American Ethnologist
“[A] rich verbal and visual text. . . . By tying colonial-era photography to the institutions within which it took place and historicizing the shifting contexts of composition, production, and distribution for the images themselves, Lydon’s beautifully produced monograph makes a significant contribution to understanding colonial photographic practice.”
Daniel Fisher
Anthropology and Humanism
“I found Lydon’s book to be a resounding success: it is an enjoyable read; an important, well-timed contribution to the disciplinary fields of history, photography, and anthropology; and an especially welcome addition to scholarship that examines the power of media practices to produce and re-imagine meaning.”
Sabra Thorner
Visual Anthropology Review
“This is a well written book, intelligently conceived and well argued. It is theoretically sophisticated while remaining accessible.”
Peggy Brock
Journal of Colonialism & Colonial History
“With its eye-catching cover, bold title and eighty-eight illustrations, Jane Lydon’s Eye Contact is an impressive scholarly work detailing the role that visual imagery, but particularly photography, played in developments at the Aboriginal mission at Coranderrer in Victoria from its beginnings in the 1870s to its closure in the early 1900s.”
Anne Maxwell
Australian Historical Studies
"Insightful. . . . The importance of Eye Contact goes beyond the recovery of aspects of untold Australian history, in that any consideration of the function of representation of Aboriginal people is a meditation on the nature of culture in Australia."
John Mateer
Melbourne Age
"The Coranderrk photographs perform seemingly contradictory roles; they are both 'memorials to a vanishing race' and a vital resource for contemporary indigenous people searching for their descendants in order to keep the past alive."
Mireille Juchau
TLS